VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA--(Marketwire - Jan. 12, 2011) - San Marco Resources Inc. (TSX VENTURE:SMN) is providing an exploration update on its 100% owned 8,549 hectare La Buena property located approximately 13 kilometers north of Goldcorp's Peñasquito mine in Zacatecas, Mexico. Highlights of the La Buena exploration program include multiple gold-in-soil anomalies, with a peak gold value of 0.678 grams per tonne (668 parts per billion). The anomalously high gold values occur in Caracol formation metasediments (siltstones and sandstones) over an area roughly 1.25 km x 1.0 km, which are locally intruded by potassic-altered dikes.

San Marco recently completed a phase 1 exploration program on La Buena property. This program included geological mapping, prospecting, gridding, soil sampling and an Induced Potential/Resistivity survey that covered just over 8 line-kilometers. Most of the work focused on an area of weakly metamorphosed Caracol Formation siltstone and sandstone found in the central part of the property. Soil sampling within the 1.25 km x 1.0 km area was completed on grid lines at 100-meter spacing, with sample intervals every 50 meters. Out of 177 soil samples collected, forty-five assayed between 50 and 100 ppb gold, twenty-six assayed between 100 and 200 ppb gold and ten samples assayed more than 200 ppb gold, with a high assay of 678 ppb gold. The samples were prepped at the ALS Chemex facility in Zacatecas, and then sent to ALS Chemex in Vancouver where fire-assay/A.A. analysis was done on the -80 mesh fraction of each sample.

Four distinct sectors of anomalously high soil gold values (greater than 100 ppb gold) occur within the area of metasediments at La Buena as northwest and northeast trending zones. The entire area of anomalous gold in soils occurs along the fold axis of a large-scale syncline that strikes east-west, dips to the north and plunges to the west. The metasediments are comprised of Caracol Formation siltstone and sandstone that are resistant to weathering and form hills that emerge out of the Bonanza Valley pediment. Within the 1.25 km x 1 km gold anomaly, monzonite and granodiorite subvolcanics intrude the metasediments locally. Assays from 16 rock chips samples of exposures of granodiorite dikes returned gold assays ranging from 58 to 247 ppb gold. Two grab samples of silicified Caracol metasediments returned gold assays of 2.27 and 5.24 gpt gold, and samples from a shallow hand-dug trench returned 10m that averaged 0.509 gpt gold.

"San Marco Resources is proposing to complete additional exploration, road building, trenching and drilling in 2011," states Robert Willis, chief executive officer of the company. "The objectives of the proposed surface exploration programs will be to not only define drill targets in the area of this soil anomaly, but also to investigate other areas of the property which exhibit interesting geology and mineralization."

San Marco expects the results of the 3-D, I.P. / Resistivity survey carried out over this same zone of gold in soil anomaly, by the end of January 2011.

Field activities were completed under the direction of Brent Hendrickson, Vice-President of Exploration for San Marco Resources who has been working in the region since 2006. The technical information contained in this press release has been based on information reviewed by San Marco's President, Robert D. Willis, P.Eng., a 'qualified person' for the purpose of National Instrument 43-101, Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects of the Canadian Securities Administrators.

Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.